Latin literatures of medieval and early modern times in Europe and beyond

Titel: Latin literatures of medieval and early modern times in Europe and beyond : a millennium heritage / edited by Francesco Stella (University of Siena) ; co-edited by Lucie Doležalová (Charles University, Prague), Danuta Shanzer (University of Vienna)
Beteiligt: ; ;
Veröffentlicht: Amsterdam; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2024]
Umfang: XVIII, 706 Seiten : Illustrationen
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch; Französisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
A comparative history of literatures in European languages ; volume 34
RVK-Notation:
Schlagworte:
Andere Ausgaben: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe: Latin literatures of medieval and early modern times in Europe and beyond. - Amsterdam : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2024. - 1 Online-Ressource (xviii, 707 Seiten)
ISBN: 9789027214478 ; 9789027247292
  • -1
  • Prelim pages
  • p. i
  • Table of contents
  • p. v
  • 1
  • Foreword
  • p. ix
  • 2
  • Instead of an introduction
  • 3
  • Chapternbsp;1. Combien de littératures latines médiévales#8239;?
  • p. 3
  • 4
  • Regional layers
  • 5
  • Chapternbsp;2. Italy
  • p. 15
  • 6
  • Chapternbsp;3. France et Belgique
  • p. 52
  • 7
  • Chapternbsp;4. Germany and Austria
  • p. 73
  • 8
  • Chapternbsp;5. Switzerland
  • p. 121
  • 9
  • Chapternbsp;6. Spain
  • p. 135
  • 10
  • Chapternbsp;7. Portugal (950-1400)
  • p. 158
  • 11
  • Chapternbsp;8. Ireland, Scotland, Wales
  • p. 168
  • 12
  • Chapternbsp;9. England
  • p. 177
  • 13
  • Chapternbsp;10. Czech lands
  • p. 199
  • 14
  • Chapternbsp;11. Poland
  • p. 207
  • 15
  • Chapternbsp;12. Hungary
  • p. 214
  • 16
  • Chapternbsp;13. Nordic countries
  • p. 221
  • 17
  • Chapternbsp;14. Baltic countries
  • p. 235
  • 18
  • Regional Latinities outside Europe in the medieval and early modern times
  • 19
  • Chapternbsp;15. Africa (fifth-sixth century)
  • p. 253
  • 20
  • Chapternbsp;16. The Middle East
  • p. 264
  • 21
  • Chapternbsp;17. Latin literature and the Arabic language
  • p. 284
  • 22
  • Chapternbsp;18. Latin orientalism
  • p. 296
  • 23
  • Chapternbsp;19. Central and East Asia
  • p. 308
  • 24
  • Chapternbsp;20. Latin literature on the "discovery" of America
  • p. 324
  • 25
  • Chapternbsp;21. A "postcolonial" approach to medieval Latin literature?
  • p. 335
  • 26
  • Medieval Latin multimedial communication
  • 27
  • Manuscripts and visual communication
  • 28
  • Chapternbsp;22. The circulation of Latin texts during the Middle Ages
  • p. 349
  • 29
  • Chapternbsp;23. Latin manuscripts as multimedia communication tools
  • p. 363
  • 30
  • Chapternbsp;24. "Textual images" and "visual texts"
  • p. 376
  • 31
  • Chapternbsp;25. Medieval science in daily life
  • p. 406
  • 32
  • Chapternbsp;26. Latin traditions in medieval cartography
  • p. 436
  • 33
  • Orality and performance
  • 34
  • Chapternbsp;27. Liturgy, drama, preaching, and narration
  • p. 453
  • 35
  • Chapternbsp;28. Sung medieval Latin verse as performance
  • p. 465
  • 36
  • Renewing paradigms
  • 37
  • Chapternbsp;29. Gendering authorship
  • p. 487
  • 38
  • Chapternbsp;30. Ecologies of medieval Latin poetics
  • p. 498
  • 39
  • Chapternbsp;31. The art of letter-writing
  • p. 507
  • 40
  • Chapternbsp;32. Between history and fiction
  • p. 523
  • 41
  • Chapternbsp;33. Starting anew
  • p. 540
  • 42
  • Interfaces. Latin/vernacular and medieval/modern
  • 43
  • Chapternbsp;34. The conquest of literacy
  • p. 557
  • 44
  • Chapternbsp;35. Troilus and Briseida in the Western literature
  • p. 578
  • 45
  • Chapternbsp;36. Fairies from Walter Map to European folklore
  • p. 588
  • 46
  • Chapternbsp;37. Geoffrey of Monmouth and the evolution of Excalibur
  • p. 596
  • 47
  • Chapternbsp;38. The matter of Troy in medieval Latin poetry (ca. 1060nbsp;- ca. 1230)
  • p. 606
  • 48
  • Chapternbsp;39. Hamlet
  • p. 625
  • 49
  • Chapternbsp;40. Faust's medieval origins
  • p. 639
  • 50
  • Biographies
  • p. 647
  • 51
  • Index Nominum
  • p. 655
  • 52
  • Index locorum
  • p. 699